1,750 research outputs found
Sally Carmichael and David McKee
Sally Carmichael and David McKee.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1940s/15129/thumbnail.jp
Eugene H. Carmichael, oral history interview
Mildred Allen, David Parker, and Bill Edmonds visited Eugene Carmichael on Wednesday at 11:00 A.M. at his home in Aynor. Mr. Carmichael was very active on the Coastal Educational Foundation, Inc. from 1956 until he resigned recently due to health. He served as Chairman of the Horry County Higher Education Commission in 1966. He shared with us on video some of the experiences during his involvement with both the Commission and the Foundation. - Mildred Holmes Allen Princehttps://digitalcommons.coastal.edu/founders/1003/thumbnail.jp
Oliver Cromwell Carmichael collection, MSS.0279
Abstract: A miscellany of material relating to this University of Alabama president, including a newspaper clipping, a Carmichael writing entitled "The Function of Instinct in Education," and a scrapbook.Scope and Content Note: The collection contains a miscellany of material relating to Carmichael, including a newspaper clipping, "Dr. Carmichael to be Honored at UA" (1973), a Carmichael pamphlet entitled "The Function of Instinct in Education," and a scrapbook.Biographical/Historical Note: Oliver Cromwell Carmichael, born on 3 October 1891, was an educator who earned his A.B. (1911) and M.A. (1914) degrees from the University of Alabama. He taught German and French at the University of Alabama, 1911-1912, and at Florence Normal School, 1912-1913, before entering Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar in 1913. However, his studies there were interrupted by World War I. Following the war he taught high school and served as a principal before becoming dean and assistant to the president of Alabama College (now the University of Montevallo) in 1922. From 1926 to 1935 he was President of that institution. In 1935 he was appointed Dean of Vanderbilt University's graduate school, serving in that capacity until 1937. He was also the University's vice chancellor, 1936-1937 and chancellor, 1937-1946. He left Vanderbilt and served as President of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, from 1946 to 1953. In 1953 he was named President of the University of Alabama, from which post he retired in 1957. Carmichael was author of Changing Role of Higher Education (1949), Universities: Commonwealth and American (1959) and Graduate Education: a Critique and a Program (1961). He died on 25 September 1966
Jere Nash Interview with Gil Carmichael
Interview conducted by author Jere Nash with Gil Carmichael as research for Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2006. A Republican, Gil Carmichael unsuccessfully ran for a state senate seat in 1967; incumbent U.S. Senator James O. Eastland\u27s seat in 1972; Mississipp governor in 1979; and Lieutenant Governor in 1983. Topics covered include his family; education; military service in World War II and Korea; his automobile dealership and real estate businesses; joining the Republican Party in Mississippi; Rubel Phillips; influence of election commissioners; Prentiss Walker; Charlie Sullivan; Republican National Convention in 1968; Richard Nixon; Ronald Reagan; Hurricane Camille redevelopment commission; James O. Eastland; school desegregation; James Meredith; Robert Clark; Charles Evers; Ellis Bodron; Walter Brown; Clark Reed; Haley Barbour; Spiro Agnew; appointment to Highway Safety Advisory Committee and the Department of Transportation; need for a new Mississippi Constitution; gun control issue; Leon Bramlett; Gerald Ford; Sonny Montgomery; and James Meredith
The jumping spiders of Pete Carmichael (Araneae: Salticidae)
Hill, David Edwin (2023): The jumping spiders of Pete Carmichael (Araneae: Salticidae). Peckhamia 292 (1): 1-5
Carmichael numbers
This paper begins with a short description of Carmichael numbers, and the characterization of Carmichael numbers due to Chernick and the proof of this characterization. This along with Carmichael\u27s original work leads naturally into a discussion of some bounds on Carmichael numbers in terms of the primes in their decomposition. Some bounds are presented and some examples given that show Carmichael numbers that attain these bounds. Next, Chernick\u27s universal forms are examined, and a general universal form with an arbitrary number of linear factors is established. Some heuristic evidence is presented that supports the conjecture of the existence of infinitely many Carmichael numbers
A Life in the Day of a Conference or Two Lives in Three Days of a Conference: Barriers to Participation
Eden Carmichael and David O'Flynn ‐ user of mental health services and psychiatrist ‐ discuss what they learned about the barriers we professionals erect to ‘user participation’ from the experience of attending an international conference together.</jats:p
SNCC Staff Letter From Stokely Carmichael, March 20, 1967
This document is a memo from Stokely Carmichael requesting all project directors and office directors to submit itemized budgets for the fiscal year 1967-1968, including funds from sources other than Atlanta. Additionally, project directors are instructed to submit names of staff members and individuals who should be allowed to attend the staff meeting, with the first few days restricted to staff members only and the last two days open to all other workers. The memo is signed by Stokely Carmichael. 1 page
Artist Interview - Lochner | Carmichael
Lochner|Carmichael are Jillian Lochner, who has worked as a commercial photographer for many years in fashion and on brand campaigns, and Andrew Carmichael, who arrived in commercial photography via a fine-art route. Lochner’s past clients include the likes of Absolut vodka, American Express, Levi’s and the New York Times Magazine; Carmichael has shown art at the ICA in London and in Vienna and Madrid. They started to work together creating still-life photography in 2014 and their collaborations have been featured in Italian Vogue, Sunday Telegraph Luxury, Amica and Creative Review.
Their work together is a genuine collaboration: each has their strengths and areas of expertise, but their joint creative output is very much the result of two minds; you could not say that one was the author and the other the support. Lochner brings great sensibility, a restrained palette and love of the flat image. Carmichael brings his making and sculptural background and a love of depth and perspective.
Prior to shooting, ideas are finessed, tested and critiqued. During the image-making process they are tested and critiqued further and then re-touched — all as a collaborative endeavour. Each has trust in the other, and as long as one is emotionally committed to an idea, they will work with each other until a successful outcome is achieved or will mutually agree to abandon it to mine another seam. They are a husband-and-wife team who know each other very well; they see their mutual support as a great strength
Aligning Financial Supervisory Structures with Country Needs
this book is the result of a World Bank
conference on regulatory structure organized to give
policymakers an opportunity to reflect on the worldwide
trend toward structural change and, in particular, the
amalgamation of regulatory agencies. Within this trend, a
number of competing models of regulatory structure have
emerged, each with its group of proponents. These models
range from an institutional structure in which each
regulatory agency is assigned to a group of industry
participants, through varying degrees of regulatory
integration, to a unified structure in which all key
regulatory responsibilities are combined within one agency.
Rather than highlight one-or more-model as necessarily
superior to the others, the conference sought to take an
objective and balanced approach to the topic. This objective
is reflected in a number of the presentations gathered here,
including chapter 2, which, by providing a balanced overview
of the alternatives, outlines the spectrum of possibilities
and the range of issues that might influence the decision to
choose a particular structure in a given situation. The
conference was structured around three themes: the choice of
an appropriate structure for regulation, problems relating
to management of the transition to a new structure, and
issues involved in implementing the new regime effectively
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